Spanish Medical Interpreting Program

A career as a healthcare interpreter

There is much more to being a certified healthcare interpreter than you would think! 

¿Hablas español? Do you want to build on your bilingual skills and work with the Latino community in the healthcare field? The Spanish Medical Interpreting Program (SMIP) at 网赌正规真人实体在线平台 may be for you! Our program prepares students to enter the rewarding, flexible, and well-compensated career of healthcare interpreting. The desire to work in this profession is fueled by a passion to help linguistically diverse patients receive equitable healthcare and improved health outcomes. The program starts every fall quarter and applicants must pass an entrance test to be accepted. 

 

Application Process

As a medical interpreter, you will work bi-directionally between your A and B languages; interpreting what the healthcare providers say in English, into Spanish, and what the Spanish-speaking patient says, into English. Near-native listening comprehension and strong speaking proficiency in both your working languages are a must. Therefore, to be accepted into the Spanish Medical Interpreting Program you must demonstrate your language proficiency by taking the entrance test. 

 

Program Learning Outcomes for Spanish Medical Interpreting

Program learning outcomes are the knowledge, skills, and abilities that students will achieve before they graduate. The outcomes below were developed by the faculty in Spanish Medical Interpreting with input from accrediting bodies, advisory committees, employers, etc. This collaboration ensures that the outcomes are relevant for careers that this certificate leads to.

Student who graduate with a Spanish Medical Interpreting Certificate will be able to:

  1. Describe the human body, its systems, and related medical concepts.
  2. Explain and relate the frameworks of the U.S. healthcare system and the interpreting profession.
  3. Apply professional standards of healthcare interpreting.
  4. Understand and express spoken language (English and Spanish) as used in healthcare settings.
  5. Analyze healthcare interactions and make decisions to promote intercultural communication.
  6. Interpret between English and Spanish in entry-level healthcare settings.

 

Careers

SMIP students

A medical or healthcare interpreter is a bilingual or a multilingual person who is professionally qualified to interpret in clinical settings. A medical interpreter can work in healthcare settings of any kind, including:

  • doctor’s offices
  • clinics (e.g. medical specialties, rehabilitation clinics)
  • hospitals (all departments such as the ER, the NICU, diagnostic imaging, labor and delivery, before, during and after surgery)
  • home health visits
  • mental health clinics
  • public health presentations
  • Generally the setting is an interview between a healthcare provider (doctor, nurse, lab technician) and a patient (or the patient and one or more family members).

Healthcare interpreters can interpret in various modalities:

  • onsite
  • remotely
  • via the telephone (OPI)
  • via video (VRI)

There are four types of healthcare interpreters: 

  • in-house interpreters (staff interpreters)
  • freelance interpreters (contract interpreters)
  • dual role interpreters (bilingual staff)
  • volunteer interpreters


Freelance healthcare interpreters:

  • earn between $26.50 to $60/hour
  • enjoy a flexible schedule
  • can sign up for appointments in advance and also work on-call, especially in acute settings such as ER

In-house healthcare interpreters:

  • may be eligible for benefits and have guaranteed hours (however, they may earn
    less per hour than freelancers)
  • often have set shifts or hours

Healthcare interpreters speak of their role as very rewarding; helping patients and family members of limited English proficiency communicate effectively with the healthcare team.

Career Outlook

The demand for professional interpreters has increased worldwide and the local language services industry is also growing. The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that “the employment of interpreters and translators is projected to grow 24 percent from 2020 to 2030, much faster than the average for all occupations. About 10,400 openings for interpreters and translators are projected each year, on average, over the decade.”

     

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image of interpreter with doctor and patient